Isaac Seligman

Isaac Seligman (2 December 1834 – 9 April 1928) was a German-American merchant banker and philanthropist. He was the youngest of eight brothers,[1] all of whom emigrated to America and became involved in running various branch offices of the merchant banking house J. & W. Seligman & Co., co-founded in Manhattan, New York City in 1846 by Isaac's elder brothers, James and Joseph Seligman.

Biography

He was born Isaak Seligmann in Baiersdorf, Erlangen-Hochstadt, Bayern, Germany (Bavaria), to David Isaak Seligman and Fanny Steinhardt. He later changed his name to Isaac, and in August 1857, at the age of 23, Seligman joined his entrepreneurial brothers in the United States.[2]

Seligman went on to run 'Seligman Brothers', the London branch of the Seligman merchant-banking empire with his brother Leopold.[1] He married 18-year-old Lina Messel (b. Darmstadt 1851) in London in 1869. Between 1869 and 1886, Lena bore him three daughters and four sons, the eldest son being Charles David Seligman.

Seligman was also a fundraiser for, benefactor to, and activist in, a large number of charitable and political organisations including the American Society in London, the Anglo-Jewish Association (lobbying against oppression of Serbian Jews), the German Association (raising funds for those wounded or made destitute by the Franco-Prussian War), the Mansion House Committee (raising funds for distressed Jews in Russia), the Eighty Club in London (social and political), and the Jew's Deaf and Dumb Home (lip-reading for deaf and dumb), originally founded by Baroness M. de Rothschild, of which home Seligman was the treasurer in 1875.

In 1896, Seligman was appointed joint legal owner and trustee of the 'Tregullow Offices' (later Zimapan Villa), a former Cornish mine office belonging to the Williams mining-mogul family of Scorrier, Cornwall, by Charles Augustus Vansittart Conybeare, barrister-at-law and MP for Camborne, Cornwall (1885-1895).[3] Seligman was released from his trusteeship in 1902 when Charles Conybeare and his wife Florence sold the property, which originally formed part of a marriage settlement, to mining engineer Charles Rule Williams,[4]

In 1899, Seligman bought 17 Kensington Palace Gardens, London,[2][5] a grand mansion built in the north Italian villa style, near Arthur Strauss MP (Charles Conybeare's parliamentary successor), who lived down at the end of the tree-lined boulevard at No. 1 Kensington Palace Gardens. At that time, Seligman's principal home, now part of London's billionaire's row, had at least four reception rooms and 13 bedrooms.

Seligman died a wealthy man in 1928 at the age of 93, leaving a fortune in his will valued at more than ₤18 million in today's money.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Leopold Seligman is dead". The New York Times. 6 December 1911. Retrieved 12 November 2010.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Smith, Peter King (2009-2011), The Banker from Baiersdorf, at www.zimapanners.com.
    The Zimapanners is the history of a 19th century Cornish count house which includes biographies of its owners, occupants and all those who had a legal interest in it.
  3. Charles A. V. Conybeare at www.zimapanners.com
  4. Charles Rule Williams at www.zimapanners.com
  5. The Crown estate in Kensington Palace Gardens: Individual buildings, Survey of London: volume 37: Northern Kensington (1973), pp. 162-193. Date accessed: 12 November 2010.